
The Attempt Is Real. But It Ain't Happened Yet.
Politics is a hell of a
game. It requires constant maneuvering and vying for position, looking
for that perfect coalition of voters to win the election.
The Republican Party claims to be
stepping out in a new direction. It has proclaimed itself a big tent
party. Anyone and everyone can be a Republican. All are welcomed.
Are they serious?
I say yes, because
they have no choice.
It
is hard to believe that the party that spawned David Duke would make
overtures to African Americans. It is even more difficult to imagine
Jesse Helms or Trent Lott hanging out with RuPaul. Is the tent that big?
Maybe not, but the Republicans recognize that to win another national
election, they need more people. National parties exist to win national
elections and the Republicans have not done so in eight years, so its
time to unzip the flaps.
This change of attitude is
critical to the survival of the Republican Party. Much has changed since
1992 when the United States found itself in an economic down turn and as
the undisputed World Super Power. The end of the Cold War, and the U.S.
projection of power demonstrated in Dessert Shield/Storm had made it
clear that the United States of America will defeat its enemies in war.
The collective fear of the Soviet Union was gone. Americans were ready
to turn inward. The Republicans were not fully in aware of the people's
altered direction.
This turning tide was tailored
for Democrats. Having not worn the mantle of the warrior party, the
Democrats were already talking about domestic issues. “Social programs,
education, we all can live together, we do not ask to see your green
card or baptism pictures nor do we care what flavor you like your sex.”
Total inclusion was and is the Democrat’s stick.
The
Republicans had a different set of interests. Most Republicans shared
the following views: strong military, limited government/low taxes and
strong religious belief. These basic values, Reaganomics, and the
perceived Soviet threat unified the party. After winning the Cold War,
the triumphant Reaganless Republicans drifted into three camps: the
Moral-Conservatives, the Fiscal-Conservatives, and the
Xenophobic-Conservatives. The principles of strong military, limited
government, and religion still applied, but factional issues began to
take precedent. The Moral-Conservatives turned up their promotion of
anti-abortion legislation, expansion of Christianity in public life, and
blocking Gay and Lesbian attempts at equality under the law. The Fiscal
Conservatives wanted a balanced budget, responsible government spending
and tax cuts. The Xenophobic-Conservatives, who included radical militia
organizations, White supremist and other people who to one degree or
another are of like mind, feared all that was not Christian white
America and wanted things they saw as threats to Protestant white
culture halted or controlled.

Thus sprung forth the two men who
most contributed to President Bush’s defeat in 1992: Patrick Buchanan
and Ross Perot. Buchanan exploited the Republican rifts with xenophobic
rhetoric about cultural wars and moral sermons against the sins of
abortion and homosexuality. His appeal was strong enough to gain 22.6
percent of the vote in the Republican primaries. The
Fiscal–Conservatives in coalition with Moral Conservative leadership
defeated Buchanan. They realized that Buchananism showed the intolerant
xenophobic side of the party and could not win a national election. But
the party still needed his voters, so Buchanan was allowed to address
the 1992 Republican Convention in an attempt to stave off a party revolt
by his followers. Buchanan’s speech, as expected, was confrontational
and judgmental, but was successful in keeping his constituents in the
party.
Buchanan’s antics alone did not
lose the election for the Republicans. The country may have re-elected
President Bush Xenophobes and all. Reagan Democrats voted Republican for
three presidential elections. They were the same democrats who where
happy with Reagan’s foreign policy and economic agenda, but helped keep
the congress either split or controlled by Democrats, effectively
blocking any radical xenophobic and moralist legislation from seeing
Reagan’s desk. Why not again? Well this election had a new issue and a
new player. Ross Perot provided an alternative vote for Democrats,
Republicans and anyone else who demanded debt control. His party (The
Reform Party) won 19 percent of the popular vote. Democrat candidate
Clinton won 43 percent and Republican President George Bush won 37.4
percent.
President
Clinton won the election but he did not have a majority vote. More
people voted for someone else than for the new president. Most of the
votes for Perot were Republican. As a result, by 1996 both parties had
taken up the balanced budget crusade because they realized they needed
Perot’s votes to win the White House.

The Republican 1996 campaign year was a near mirror version of 1992.
Buchanan once again attempted to set the course of the party. He once
again failed to change the party’s direction while succeeding in vividly
revealing the xenophobic control tendencies of the party. Once again the
Republicans lost to President Clinton who won with less than half of the
popular vote with 49 percent. The Republican candidate Senator Bob Dole
had 41 percent and, once again, most of Ross Perot’s votes came from
Republicans. But he posted less than half his previous showing, going
from 19% to 8%. Fiscal-Conservative Republicans and some conservative
Democrats voted Republican since both parties had adopted the balanced
budget position.
The
year 2000 is a critical election for Republicans national party as
windows of opportunity are slowly closing. The Right’s moral agenda may
find itself on hold if a Republican president is not elected soon.
Republicans have had controlled the House and the Senate since the Newt
Gingrich engineered thrashing of the Democrats in 1994. This was the
first time the Republicans controlled both the House and the Senate
since 1954. Now the Republican Moral-Conservatives need a president that
will at a minimum sign into a law a bill against so-called partial birth
abortions and appoint judges that in their lingo are “pro-life” and
hopefully “pro-religion,” to the Supreme Court. Who knows how long the
Republicans can control congress? A split or democrat dominated congress
would never produce “pro-life” bills for the president to see let alone
sign. Timing causes similar problems in naming Supreme Court Justice. A
Republican must be in the White House to name a judge. How much longer
will Chief Justice Rehnquist at 80 years and Associate Stevens at 76
years be on the court? This next president may have the opportunity to
name their replacements. If not in this term, then the next president
will undoubtedly appoint a justice.
These are important issues for the Moral-Conservatives,
but the Fiscal-Conservatives have a different agenda. The Fiscal
Conservatives are pro-business. Their agenda is wealth creation in a
laissez faire market system. Fiscal-Conservatives’ moral positions span
the spectrum of leftwing to rightwing, but those issues are not their
primary concern. Having made their importance felt by voting for Ross
Perot, Fiscal Conservatives have returned to lead the Republican Party.
Their return has created a shift in the base of the party. Although the
Moral Conservatives are still important and needed by the party to win
elections, they have lost a bit of their clout. Their paranoid driven
alliance with the Xenophobes kept non-white Moral Conservative Democrats
from the party. The Fiscal Republicans have led the charge to severe the
party affiliation with the Xenophobes. The moralist had two chances to
win the White House based on moral and xenophobic issues. This alliance
did not serve the party well. So the Xenophobic dark-side of the party
is slowly being driven out. It is no coincidence that Pat Buchanan is no
longer a member of the Republican Party. He represented a liability for
the moral and fiscal agenda of the party. Patrick
scared voters, so it was time for him to go.

It is important to note that Xenophobic-Conservatives and
Moral-Conservatives are not necessarily the same constituency. There is
most definitely a strong relationship between the Xenophobes and the
moralists. Bob Jones University, Christian Identity churches and the
religious rhetoric espoused by both radical militia and Klan
organizations, illustrate this relationship. But most moralists are not
radical racists and their defining agenda is not race-based. It is
focused on abortion, homosexuality, and expansion of religion and their
moral values in public life. The xenophobes of the party are going
elsewhere as they have begun
to distrust all organizations of government, including the Republican
Party. A wave of government distrust swept the nation in the
mid-nineties. This distrust combined with NAFTA, the federal law
enforcement actions at Ruby Ridge and Waco have alienated many
Xenophobes. The moralists need a candidate that can deliver on signing
anti-abortion legislation and appoint conservatives to the Supreme
Court. They know Buchanan is unelectable and cannot help them. So when
Buchanan left the party no one went with him. The Xenophobes who left
the party are either busy preparing for future confrontations or may
vote for Buchanan. But this small number should not hurt the Republicans
unless the race is plus or minus 3 points.

So how does this all add up? Where is the Republican
Party headed? There is a power shift-taking place in the party as well
as slight ideological changes. These changes are born from necessity, as
are all political changes. The Fiscal-Conservatives seek to move the
party closer to the center on moral issues and eradicate as much as is
possible in a racist, homophobic, sexist society, the xenophobia that
once ran rampant in the party. They have placated the moralists by
putting the usual anti-abortion/homosexual planks in the party platform.
The moralists have agreed to step out of the limelight and let the
Fiscal-Conservatives take the lead in the public eye. But they see the
platform as emphatically stating the party’s position and they expect
Bush to live up to it, especially the abortion plank. But when Larry
King asked Fiscal-Conservative General Colin Powell about the platform,
Powell claimed he had not even read the document and felt that it is not
important. This is a signal to voters that there are strong elements in
the party who intend to move it in a different direction and some of the
old rhetoric present is not to be taken seriously. These different
opinions about the party platform illustrate the current struggle in the
party. The moralists still control much of the party and continue to
push their agenda as the party’s focus. The Fiscal-Conservatives would
rather tone down morality rhetoric and emphasize an economic agenda of
wealth creation. Both the moralists and the Fiscal Conservatives want to
win the presidency. The reality of the diverse faces of America has made
the party realize that it cannot win with radical, racist policies. So
most (not all) of the Xenophobes are gone or are toning down their
rhetoric. Both are calling out to non-Whites to join the party (they
accept that homosexuals are members) because they want to win. Is it
heartfelt? As a party yes, as individuals, no.
Every presidential election is a critical moment in
American history. The passing of such great power and responsibility
from one person to another is momentous. But more important than who
wins this election is the coalitions aspired too in the effort to win.
The Republicans hope to change the mix of American politics. They seek
to join white-skinned Moral-Conservatives with non-white skinned
Moral-Conservatives and white-skinned Fiscal-Conservatives with
non-white skinned Fiscal-Conservatives. The party will be controlled by
whoever has the most votes. A win for Bush will ignite the transition. A
lose will only make the party work harder.
Politics is a hell of a game.